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while everyone's rightfully talking about oppenheimer and its flaws regarding the erasure of japanese and native american voices regarding nuclear testing and detonations, i'd like to bring up the fact that pacific islanders have also been severely impacted by nuclear testing under the pacific proving grounds, a name given by the US to a number of sites in the pacific that were designated for testing nuclear weapons after the second world war, at least 318 of which were dropped on our ancestral homes and people. i would like if more people talked about this.
important sections are bolded for ease of reading. i would appreciate this being reblogged since it's a bit alarming how few people know about this.
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in 1946, the indigenous peoples of pikinni (the bikini atoll) were forcibly relocated off of their islands so that nuclear tests could be run on the atoll. at least 23 nuclear bombs were detonated on this inhabited island chain, including 20 hydrogen bombs. many pasifika were irreversibly irradiated, all of them were starved during multiple forced relocations, and the island chain is still unsafe to live on despite multiple cleanup attempts. there are several craters visible from space that were left on the atoll from nuclear testing.
the forced relocation was to several different small and previously uninhabited islands over several decades, none of which were able to sustain traditional lifestyles which directly lead to further starvation and loss of culture and identity. there is a reason that pacific islanders choose specific islands to inhabit including access to fresh water, food, shelter, cloth and fibre, climate, etc. and obviously none of these reasons were taken into account during the displacements.
200 pikinni were eventually moved back to the atoll in the 1970s but dangerous levels of strontium-90 were found in drinking water in 1978 and the inhabitants were found to have abnormally high levels of caesium-137 in their bodies.
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i'm going to put the rest of this post under a readmore to improve the chances of this being reblogged by the general public. i would recommend you read the entirety of the post since it really isn't long and goes into detail about, say, entire islands being fully, utterly destroyed. like, wiped off of the map. without exaggeration, entire islands were disintegrated.
My take on a Yapese Miku ✨🇫🇲
For AAPI month im changing my banner to the stylized guam flag I found on tiktok. Luv being chamorro
🇫🇲 Micronesian guys | Compare with average lengths worldwide » All African dicks » All American dicks » All Arabian dicks » All Asian dicks » All European dicks » All Oceanian dicks [The higher the flag, the longer the dick]
Descendants of the First Seafarers
Some of the ancestors of the native peoples of Madagascar, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Islands (Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia) came from an ancient seaborne migration out of Taiwan and the Philippines (2200 BCE - 1250 CE). Cultural traditions still shared among these far-flung peoples today include tātau (tattoos), jade carving, stilt houses, and the cultivation of taro, pork, rice, coconuts, and yams.
This is a gallery-quality giclée art print on 100% cotton rag archival paper, printed with archival inks.
https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/seeking-compensation-radiation-survivors-marshall-islands
Pacific Islander Book Guide
In honor of the last day of Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Please note this is just 10 selections I picked, and by no means a comprehensive guide!
I wanted to do this because I personally find that Pacific Islanders are often left out of the AAPI discussion. Expand your consumption of Pacific Islander media beyond Disney’s Moana!
Moloka’i by Alan Brennert, Hawai’ian
Where Dreams Descend by Janella Ángeles, Filipino
Frangipani by Célestine Vaite, Tahitian
Euphoria by Lily King, Papuan
Lalani of the Distant Sea by Erin Entrapta Kelly, Filipino
The Bone People by Keri Hulme, Maori
Shark Dialogues by Kiana Davenport, Hawai’ian
Island of Shattered Dreams by Chantal Spitz, Tahitian
The Whale Rider by Witi Ihimaera, Maori
The People in the Trees by Hanya Yanagihara, Micronesian